Creeping in a sentence as a noun

Watch out, you could be creeping someone out.

And then, maybe, some odd details start creeping in.

Google's search URLs have slowly been creeping up in length over years.

Maybe you missed it, but searching here in Hacker News, you'll find it creeping along.

The fallacy there is that there is nothing to prevent ads from creeping in even though you do pay.

This means that the IPC problems are now creeping into the world of monolithic kernels.

Things settled down...But, as they often do, stress started creeping back into my life and my habits started to slip.

I'm thinking, "Sure, there's some bottom feeders creeping in, but Agile's still based on a core of people who really care about doing good work.

The issue of model code creeping into controllers is common with rails and rails-style frameworks precisely because they are not MVC frameworks.

Indifference towards people's side projects and new startup ideas has been creeping into the HN community for the past couple of years and I find it discouraging.

But in some ways in the last decade or so North Korea has been creeping towards something close to normalcy, albeit far from idealcorrupt officials, flourishing black markets, extreme disparities in wealth, and even cross-border trade with China.

I see a lot of that creeping back in through the new concept of a "UX Developer".Here are the three big quotes that are making me nervous:"Its our job to help translate their vision to the development team in a way that they can understand and accept""Similarly, we need to speak on behalf the developers to help reign in the designers, at times.

Creeping definitions

noun

a slow mode of locomotion on hands and knees or dragging the body; "a crawl was all that the injured man could manage"; "the traffic moved at a creep"

See also: crawl crawling creep